Showing posts with the label France

The Giant of Castelnau

Jan 14, 2022

Legends of giants permeate folklore of cultures around the world. The ancient Greeks had Gigantes who were born of Gaia (Earth) when blood f...

The Longest Sightlines on Earth

Jan 10, 2022

Last year around April, residents in the state of Punjab in northern India were astonished to see the Himalayas from the rooftop of their h...

Eustace The Monk Who Became a Pirate And Inspired The Figure of Robin Hood

Jan 5, 2022

Every good comic book fan will have read some of the adventures of Corto Maltés and if so, will remember that one of the characters that the...

The Burning of Tuileries Palace

Dec 15, 2021

Directly in front of the Louvre, between the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel and the Arc de Triomphe de l'Etoile in Paris, where there is n...

Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot And The World’s First Automobile

Dec 14, 2021

The world’s first self-propelled mechanical vehicle, in other words, the world’s first automobile, was built by the largely unknown French i...

The Last Public Execution by Guillotine

Dec 1, 2021

On the morning of 17 June 1939, a crowd gathered outside the doors of the Saint-Pierre prison, in the center of Versailles. They had come to...

The First Photograph in History

Oct 20, 2021

It doesn’t look like much, but this is the world’s first photograph, or rather, the oldest surviving photograph, or both. It was taken by ...

The Chain Boats of Europe

Oct 4, 2021

In his travelogue, A Tramp Abroad , Mark Twain describes an encounter with a curious boat on the River Neckar in Germany.  We ra...

The Tiara of Saitapharnes

Jul 2, 2021

For the better part of a decade, the widely celebrated and esteemed Louvre Museum of Paris proudly displayed a supposedly ancient tiara made...

That Time When The French Divided The Day Into 10 hours

Jun 28, 2021

For centuries we have used the sexagesimal system of measuring time, where each day is divided into 24 hours, each hour into 60 minutes and ...

HMS Diamond Rock: The Stone Frigate

Jun 11, 2021

South of Martinique, an island in the eastern Caribbean Sea, lies a small basalt island called Diamond Rock. With an imposing peak of 175 me...

What Happened to Napoleon’s Penis?

May 18, 2021

The diminutive French military leader Napoléon Bonaparte lies buried in a crypt under the dome at Les Invalides, in Paris, sans many vital b...

Pilâtre de Rozier And The World’s First Aviation Accident

May 13, 2021

In 1783, French professor Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier created history by becoming the first man to fly in a balloon untethered. Two year...

Gnomonic Blocks, or Multi-faceted Sundials

May 11, 2021

In the park of the Abbey of Epau, in Yvré-l'Evêque in France, you can admire a curious monument in the shape of an obelisk. Built by the...

Le Jamais Contente: The First Car To Go 100kmph

May 5, 2021

Imagine a metal cylinder less than 4 meters long, on four wheels, with the driver mounted on top like one rides a horse. No seat belts, no r...

Women And Children Last: The Infamous Sinking of La Bourgogne

May 3, 2021

The sinking of the French ocean liner SS La Bourgogne on the morning of 4 July 1898 was one of the most disgraceful of disasters in mariti...

Elephant of The Bastille

Apr 14, 2021

Between 1814 and 1846, there stood a colossal plaster elephant in the heart of Paris, at the site of the former Bastille prison. For much of...

The Mercy Dogs of World War 1

Mar 26, 2021

Dogs have accompanied men to war since ancient times, as scouts, sentries, trackers and messengers. But the most unique role they ever playe...

Heroic War Pigeons

Mar 16, 2021

World War One, and to some extent, the Second World War, was a strange blend of archaic and modern technology. The First World War, in parti...

How a Failed Dam Legalized Marrying The Dead

Mar 12, 2021

Sitting low among the hills, just north of the city of Frejus, in southern France, not far from the French Riviera coast, are the broken rem...